Ancestors of Robert Erwin William Juch
Twenty-Second Generation
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2384920. Sir William de Neville was born about 1334 in Rolleston, Nottinghamshire, England. He died about 1420. William married Elizabeth Fencotte about 1360 in Rolleston, Nottinghamshire, England. [Parents]
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2384921. Elizabeth Fencotte was born about 1338 in Rolleston, Nottinghamshire, England. She died after 1402. [Parents]
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They had the following children:
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2385024. Arnald St. Leger was born about 1374. He died 1431. [Parents]
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He had the following children:
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2385026. James Donnett was born 1380 in Syleham, Suffolk, England. He died 1409 in Rainham, Essex, England.
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He had the following children:
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2385088. Ralph de Neville 2nd Lord Neville was born about 1291 in Raby, Durham, England. He died 5 Aug 1367 in Raby, Durham, England. Ralph married Alice d'Audley on 14 Jan 1324 in Hadley, Staffordshire, England. [Parents]
Ralph de Nevill, 2nd baron, was summoned to parliament from 20 November, 1331, to 20 January, 1336. This nobleman, in the time of his father, was retained by indenture to serve the Lord Henry de Percy for life, in peace and war, against all men except the king, with twenty men-at-arms, whereof five to be knights receiving Â100 sterling per annum. Theeeeee disputee with ttthhhe prior of Durham, regarding the presentation of the stag was revived and finally set to rest in the abandonment of his claim by this Lord Nevill. The matter is thus detailed by Dugdale: "In this year likewise, doing his fealty to William, prior of Durham, upon Lammas Day, for the manor of Raby, he told him, 'that he would offer the stag as his ancestors had done; saving that, whereas his father required that the prior's servants should be set aside at that time and his own serve in their stead, he would be content that his should attend together with those of the prior's; and, whereas his father insisted that his servants should only be admitted at dinner, he stood upon it that his should be there entertained the whole day and likewise the morrow at breakfast.' Whereupon the prior made answer, 'that none of his ancestors were ever so admitted and that he would rather quit the stag than suffer any new custom to the prejudice of their church.' But, to this Ralph replied, 'that he would perform the whole service or none and put the trial of his right upon the country.' The prior, therefore, knowing him to be so powerful and that the country could not displease him, declined the offer; howbeit, at length, to gain his favour, in regard he had no small interest at court and might do him a kindness or a displeasure, was content for that one time he should perform it as he pleased so that it might not be drawn into example afterwards; and, to the purpose proposed, that indentures should be made betwixt them. Whereupon the Lord Nevill brought but few with him and those more for the honour of the prior than a burthen; and so, shortly after dinner, took his leave, but left one of his servants to lodge there all night and to take his breakfast there on the next day; 'protesting that, being both a son and tenant to the church, he would not be burthensome to it, in respect it would be no advantage to himself but might much damnifie him if he should bring with him as great a train as he would, saying, 'what doth a breakfast signify to me? nothing. And likewise, that if the prior would shew that he had no right to what he so claimed, he would freely recede therefrom; and if he had a right, he would accept a composition for it rather than be burthensome to the convent; but if they should put him to get his right by law, then he would not abate anything thereof.' Whereupon inquiry being made amongst the eldest monks of the house, they affirmed that, being of eight years standing when his father was before repulsed, they had often seen the stag offered, and that he never staid dinner but when the prior invited him, and some ancient men of the country testified as much; also, that so soon as the stag was brought, they carried him to the kitchen, and those who brought him were taken into the hall to breakfast, as they that bring their rents used to be.
"Moreover, when it happened any of the Lords Nevill to be desired to stay dinner with the prior, his cook was admitted into the kitchen to prepare a dish for him; so, likewise, another servant in the cellar to choose his drink; and in like manner, some other at the gate who knew his servants and followers, merely to let them in and keep out others who, under pretence of being servants, might then intrude. But this was only done by the prior, as out of courtesy and respect, and not at all out of right."
In the 7th Edward III [1314], Lord Nevill was one of the commissioners sent into Scotland, there to see that the covenants between Edward de Baliol, King of Scots, and his royal master were ratified by the parliament of that kingdom; and the next year he was joined with Henry de Percy in the wardenship of the marches of Northumberland, Cumberland, and Westmoreland. He had, subsequently, other high and confidential employments and was constantly engaged in the wars of Scotland and France. His lordship m. Alice, dau. of of Sir Hugh de Audley, and by her (who m 2ndly, Ralph, Lord Greystock, and d. 1374) had issue, John, Thomas, Robert, Alexander, Ralph, Euphemia, Catherine, Margaret, Isabel, and Eleanor.
He d. in 1367 and was buried in the church of Durham, on the south side thereof, being the first layman that had sepulture there, which favour he obtained from the prior and convent for a vestment of red velvet, richly embroidered with gold silk, great pearls, and images of the saints standing in tabernacles by him given to St Cuthbert. His body being brought in a chariot drawn by seven horses to the boundary of the churchyard and thence conveyed upon the shoulders of knights into the middle of the church where the abbot of St. Mary's in York (by reason of the bishop's absence and impotency of the dean), performed the office of the dead, and celebrated the morrow mass, at which were offered eight horses, viz., four for the war, with four men armed, and all their harness and habiliments; and four others for peace; as also three cloths of gold, of blue colour, interwoven with flowers. Four of those horses were redeemed after the funeral by Sir John, his son and heir, for 100 marks. His lordship was s. by his eldest son, Sir John de Nevill. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London, England, 1883, p. 393, Nevill, Barons Nevill, of Raby, Earls of Westmoreland]
Sources for Clavering, Neville and FitzRandolph:
FitzRandolph Traditions: A Story of a Thousand Years. Published 1907 by
L. F. V. FitzRandolph, life member N. J. Historical Society, pp. 21, 22, 23, 24,
25, 26, 29, 31; Chapter 9, pp. 117-121, Review of the Descent from Rolf, the
Norman and Dane.
Edmondson's Baronagium Genealogical, Vol. 4, pp. 350-351.
Burke's Genealogical History of the Dorman Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct
Peerages of Great Britain, pp. 393-396.
Browning's Magna Carta Barons and their Descendants, pp. 87-90, 98-9.
Wurts' Magna Charta, pp. 569-70.
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2385089. Alice d'Audley was born 1300 in Hadley, Staffordshire, England. She died 11 Jan 1373 in Greystoke, Northumberland, England. [Parents]
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They had the following children:
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John de Neville 3rd Lord of Neville was born about 1328 and died 17 Oct 1388. | |
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Margaret de Neville was born 12 Feb 1341 in Raby, Durham, England. She died 12 May 1372. |
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John de Neville 3rd Baron Neville was born 1328 in Raby With Keverstone, Durham, England. He died 1388.
Sir John Nevill, 3rd Baron Nevill of Raby, summoned to Parliament from 1368-1388. Knight of the Garter. This nobleman was carried by his father to witness the Battle of Durham, being then scarcely five years old. He received the honour of Knighthood when in arms before the barriers of Paris. In 44th of Edward III (1370) he was again in wars with France and then constituted Admiral of the King's Fleet from the mouth of the Thames northward. During the remainder of Edward III's reign he was constantly in active service either in Scotland or France. In 2nd of Richard II (1379) he was constituted Lieutenant of Aquitiane in France and Seneschal of Bordeaux. His lordship was a Knight of the Garter. He married Maud, daughter of Henry, Lord Percy. He married 2nd Elizabeth, daughter of William, Lord Latimer. He died at New Castle October 17, 1388, and was buried in the south side of the nave of Durham Cathedral. He was succeeded by his son, Ralph .
Sources: Collins' English Peerage, Vol. 5, pp. 151-162.
Edmondson's Baronagium Genealogicum, Vol. 4, p. 350.
Cokayne's Complete Peerage, Vol. 1, pp. 24-31.
Berry's Visitation of Hants (Hampshire), p. 209.
Burke's Dormant and Extinct Peerage, pp. 392-394.
American Families Genealogic and Heraldic, Vol. 9, p. 94.
History and Lineage Book of Daughters of American Colonists in Missouri, compiled by Mellcene Thurman Smith, pp. 356-358. |
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Catherine de Neville was born 1332. |
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Margaret de Neville was born 1340. She died 12 May 1372. |
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2385090. Henry de Percy 2nd Lord de Percy was born 6 Feb 1300. He died Feb 1351 and was buried in Alnwick Castle, Northumberland, England. Henry married Idonea (Idoine) de Clifford Lady Alnwick. [Parents]
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2385091. Idonea (Idoine) de Clifford Lady Alnwick was born about 1300 in Appleby Castle, Westmorland, England. She died 1 24 Aug 1365 in Alnwick, Northumberland, England and was buried in Beverly Minister, Beverly, Yorkshire, England. [Parents]
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They had the following children:
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Maude de Percy died before 18 Feb 1378. | |
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Henry de Percy 4th Lord Percy was born 10 Nov 1341 in Northumberland, England. He died 19 Feb 1407 in Bramham Moor, West Yorkshire, England.
Henry de Percy, 4th Lord Percy, of Alnwick, a distinguished military commander in the reign of Edward III, who, assisting as marshal of England at the coronation of King Richard II, was advanced on the same day, 6 July, 1377, to the Earldom of Northumberland, with remainder to his heirs generally, and, like a barony in fee, transmissible, it would appear, to female as well as male heirs. He m. 1st, 1358, Margaret, dau. of Ralph, Lord Nevil, Ro Raby, and had issue. Henry, Thomas, Ralph, Alan, and Margaret. The earl m. 2ndly, Maud, sister and heir of Anthony, Lord Lucy, which Anthony settled upon his lordship and his heirs, the honour and castle of Cockermouth with other great estates, on condition that her arms should be forever quarterd with those of the Percys. In the 7th year of Richard II [1384], the earl having been elected one of the knights of the Garter, the king bestowed upon him the robes of the order out of the royal wardrobe. In some years afterwards, however, being proclaimed a traitor, and his land declared forfeited by King Richard, his lordship, in conjunction with his son, Sir Henry Percy, surnamed Hotspur, and Henry, Duke of Lancaster, accomplished the dethronement of that monarch and placed the crown upon the head of Henry, Duke of Lancaster, under the title of Henry IV. In requital, the king gave Percy the Isle of Man, by the tenure of carrying in the left hand the sword (which he wore when he landed in Holderness) at the coronation of himself and his successors. Against dissatisfied with the governemnt, the ducke is charged with concerting the rebellion, in which his son, Hotspur, and his brother, the Earl of Worcester, engaged, in 1403, for transferring the sceptre to Mortimer, Earl of March, then a boy. Of these two eminent persons, Sir Henry Percy, the renowned Hotspur, fell performing prodigies of valour, at Battle-field, near Shrewsbury, 21 July, 1403, and Thomas Percy, Earl of Worcester, was beheaded after the battle at Shrewsbury. The Earl of Northumberland fell subsequently (29 February, 1407-8), in arms against the king, at Bramham Moor, nearl Haslewood, when his honour became forfeited under an attainder, but were restored, in 1414, to his grandson (Hotspur's only son), Henry de Percy, 2nd Earl of Northumberland. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited, and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London, 1883, pp. 423-4, Percy, Barons Percy, Earls of Northumberland, &c.] |
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2385092. Edward III Plantagenet King of England was born 13 Nov 1312 in Windsor Castle, Berkshire, England. He died 21 Jun 1377 in Sheen Palace, Surrey, England and was buried in Westminster Abbey, London, England. Edward married Philippa of Hainault on 24 Jan 1327/1328 in York Minster, Deangate, Yorkshire, England. [Parents]
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2385093. Philippa of Hainault was born 24 Jun 1311 in Le Quesnoy, Nord, France. She died 14 Aug 1369 in Windsor Castle, Windsor, Berkshire, England and was buried in Westminster Abbey, London, England. [Parents]
Walter of Stapeldon was bishop of Exeter, and in 1319 served on an English diplomatic mission to the Low Countries to negotiate a naval agreement. As part of their responsibilities, the emissaries also visited Hainaut and gave Philippa the once-over. It is interesting that she was even then being considered as a possible future queen of England, nearly a full decade before Queen Isabella finally closed the negotiations.
A document from their trip gives a fairly full physical description of the young girl: she was well built, without any obvious deformity; good hair, neither light nor dark; neat head, with a somewhat bulbous forehead (considered a sign of beauty); her eyes were dark brown, almost black, and fairly close together (NOT a good sign). Her nose was all right, except the tip was a bit broad and the nostrils a tad large. The lips were full, especially the lower one. Her teeth were good, some whiter than others, and the lower row was noticeably irregular while the upper row protruded just a bit--not too much. Her skin was brownish, not the translucent white of a romance heroine. She resembled her father a good deal (a good sign as it suggested she was more masculine and might well have more sons than daughters), both parents were very fond of her, and all the courtiers of Hainaut thought well of her too, as far as the envoys were able to determine.
According to her mother, Philippa would have her ninth birthday at the next feast of the Nativity of St John Baptist (24 June), which puts her birth on or near that day in the year 1310. She was thus about two and one-half years older than her future husband, and would have been about 45 when she bore her last child Thomas in 1355. -- John Carmi Parsons (edited)
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Edward and Philippa had the following children:
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Edward "The Black Prince" Plantagenet Prince of Wales was born 15 Jun 1330 in Woodstock Palace, Oxfordshire, England. He died 8 Jun 1376 in Westminster Palace, London, Middlesex, England and was buried in Canterbury Cathedral, London, England.
He distinguished himself as a military leader during the Hundred Years' War. During his lifetime he was called Edward of Woodstock; the name Black Prince was given him because of the black armor he wore. Parts of his armor still hang in Canterbury Cathedral. |
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Isabella Plantagenet was born 16 Jun 1332 in Woodstock Palace, Oxfordshire, England. She died before Oct 1382 in London, Middlesex, England. |
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Joan (Joanna) Plantagenet was born about Feb 1334/1335 in Woodstock Palace, Oxfordshire, England. She died 2 Sep 1348 in Bayonne. |
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Lionel Plantagenet Duke of Clarence was born 29 Nov 1338 in Antwerp, Belgium. He died 17 Oct 1368 in Alba, Piedmont, Italy. |
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John "of Gaunt" Plantagenet Duke of Lancaster was born 24 Jun 1340 and died 3 Feb 1398/1399. | |
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Edmund Plantagenet of Langley, Duke of York was born 5 Jun 1341 in Kings Langley, Herts, England. He died 1 Aug 1402 in Kings Langley, Herts, England. |
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2385094. Payne Roet was born about 1310.
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He had the following children:
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2385096. Thomas de Beauchamp 1 was born 14 Feb 1313/1314 in Warwick Castle, Warwickshire, England. He died 13 Nov 1369 in Calais, France. Thomas married Catherine de Mortimer.
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2385097. Catherine de Mortimer 1 was born 1316 in Wigmore, Herefordshire, England. She died 6 Sep 1369.
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They had the following children:
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Maud de Beauchamp 1 was born 1333 in Warwickshire, England. She died 1402. |
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Isabel de Beauchamp 1 was born 1335 in Warwickshire, England. |
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Thomas de Beauchamp was born 16 Mar 1338/1339 and died 8 Apr 1401. |
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2385098. William de Ferrers 1 was born 28 Feb 1332/1333 in Groby, Leicestershire, England. He died 8 Jan 1370/1371 in Stebbing, Essex, England. William married Margaret de Ufford.
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2385099. Margaret de Ufford 1 was born 1335 in Thurston, Suffolk, England.
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They had the following children:
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2385664. William Wyatt de Southange 1 married Jane Bailiffe de Barnsley. [Parents]
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They had the following children:
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2385666. Richard Skipwith 1.
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He had the following children:
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2385698. Sir Reynold Braybrook 1 was born after 1321. He died 1405. Reynold married Joan de la Pole.
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2385699. Joan de la Pole 1 was born after 1356. She died 1433. [Parents]
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They had the following children:
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2385708. Sir John Howard of Essex 1.
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He had the following children:
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2385710. Sir Thomas de Mowbray 6th Lord Mowbray. 1st Duke of Norfolk, Earl of Nottingham 1 was born 22 Mar 1365/1366 in Epworth, Isle of Axholme, Lincolnshire, England. He died 22 Sep 1399/1400 in Venice, Italy and was buried in St.George Abbey, Venice, Italy. Thomas married Elizabeth FitzAlan. [Parents]
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2385711. Elizabeth FitzAlan 1 was born 1375. She died 8 Jul 1425 in Venice, Italy and was buried in Hoveringham, York, England. [Parents]
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They had the following children:
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2385712. Robert Heydon 1 was born about 1384 in Heydon, England. He married Cecily Oulton about 1405 in Norfolk, England. [Parents]
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2385713. Cecily Oulton 1 was born about 1386 in Oulton, Norfolk, England. [Parents]
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They had the following children:
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2385714. Nicholas Longford 1 was born about 1375 in Longford, Derbyshire, England. He married Margaret Appleby about 1395 in Derbyshire, England.
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2385715. Margaret Appleby 1 was born about 1378 in Longford, Derbyshire, England. [Parents]
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They had the following children:
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2385716. John Winter 1 was born about 1384 in Winterberningham, England.
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He had the following children:
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2385718. William Hampton 1 was born about 1386 in Baconsthorpe, Norfolkshire, England.
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He had the following children:
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2385720. Thomas Boleyn was born about 1350 in Salle, Norfolk, England. He died about 1410. Thomas married Jane Bracton.
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2385721. Jane Bracton was born about 1354 in Norfolk, England. She died about 1410.
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They had the following children:
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2385722. John Bracton was born about 1359 in Salle, Norfolk, England. He died about 1410 in England.
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He had the following children:
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Alice Bracton was born about 1380 and died about 1440. |
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2385724. Sir Thomas Hoo 1 was born about 1366 in Litcham, Norfolk, England. He died Aug 1420. Thomas married Eleanor de Felton. [Parents]
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2385725. Eleanor de Felton was born about 1350 in Litcham, Norfolk, England. She died before 1393. [Parents]
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They had the following children:
Surname List | Name Index
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